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Senate Passes Tax Reform Bill

The Senate passed its version of the tax reform bill early Saturday morning on a vote of 51-49. The vote came after last-minute negotiations between Senate leadership and key holdouts who had concerns about the treatment of pass-through entities, the state and local tax deduction, and the effect the cuts would have on the budget.

The legislation calls for a 20 percent corporate rate, a 23 percent deduction for pass-throughs, and rate cuts for individuals, though the pass-through and individual provisions are set to expire in 2026. One last-minute change retained the state and local tax deduction – up to a $10,000 property tax write-off—making the Senate bill more like the House version.

The change with respect to passthrough entities means that top earning pass-through owners—those taxed at the 38.5 percent rate—would pay about 29.6 percent on their business income.

The Senate bill also included some revenue raising provisions to offset these costs. Among them is a measure to maintain the corporate alternative minimum tax, as well as the individual AMT, but with higher exemption levels than under current law.

The bill would cost about $1.45 trillion over a decade, according to estimates from the Congressional Budget Office but Republicans maintained that revenue growth would more than pay for the revenue loss. However, a Joint Committee on Taxation dynamic estimate on a previous version of the bill said it would add about $1 trillion to the deficit over 10 years.

a provision for cash distributions for an S corporation converting to a C corporation;

higher repatriation rates on corporate profits held overseas— at 14.5 percent for cash and 7.5 percent for illiquid assets, up from 10 percent and 5 percent in an earlier version of the bill, two tax lobbyists told Bloomberg Tax;

a lower threshold for deduction of medical expenses—7.5 percent of gross income for two years.

A copy of the Senate GOP amendment is available here. Please note that, prior to the final vote, lawmakers adopted an amendment from Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) that would allow funds from Section 529 savings accounts to be used for elementary and high school tuition.

The House and Senate will now begin to work out any remaining differences between their two bills, including how to approach pass-through taxation and whether the plan should include an alternative minimum tax. The final, identical version of the bill will have to pass both chambers before Trump can sign the bill into law. Importantly, neither the House nor the Senate tax reform bills contain provisions that would impact the upcoming filing season.

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